


Nada Hamza
N+A Gallery
Mixed Media, Pottery
9245 Wood Glade Dr., Great Falls, VA 22066

Studio map #
20
SATURDAY ACTIVITIES - Surface Dialogues @ 2 pm. An interactive exercise in spatial composition. Using a curated selection of textures, forms, and structural elements, participants are invited to construct their own small-scale reliefs—exploring surface, depth, and material interplay through an architectural lens. All materials provided. Open to all levels of experience.
SUNDAY ACTIVITIES - Becoming Form: A Live Creation @ 2 pm. Witness a single artwork take shape in real time—where heat meets gesture, and raw material becomes memory, texture, and light. A quiet act of making, revealed.
My art is where architecture meets memory—each piece built to hold energy, movement, and emotion.




Nada Amin Hamza is a multidisciplinary artist and architect whose three-dimensional wall-based works transform surface into sensory experience. Blending spatial design with expressive form, her pieces explore the tension between structure and softness—where light, texture, and material engage in a quiet, layered dialogue. With a background in architecture and design, Nada brings spatial precision and emotional depth to her practice. Her works blur the line between wall art and installation, combining sculptural relief with transparency, geometry, and reflective elements. Influenced by classical architecture, minimalist design, and organic movement, she creates compositions that feel both deliberate and fluid—objects that suggest motion and evoke memory. Nada’s approach is rooted in creating immersive encounters. Though mounted to the wall, her pieces reach beyond their surface, inviting viewers to engage physically and emotionally. She works with a diverse mix of materials—including molded acrylic, metallic spheres, and textured surfaces—allowing each piece to emerge through a process of discovery. As founder of Nada Art & Design and N+A Gallery, Nada extends her vision across disciplines, crafting environments where art becomes not just an object, but an experience—where memory, form, and movement come to life in three dimensions.